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Dear Men Who Wish to Be Allies to Women: 12 Things You Need to Know

This makes you a decent human being. Not to mention on the right side of history.

You may have witnessed an upsurge of toxic masculinity lately – say, for example, the entire second presidential debate– drawing attention to what has always been here under the surface but, perhaps, hasn’t always been as visible to you.

You might’ve even experienced some degree of guilt or shame for being a man when some men are acting in such vile, repugnant ways and making decisions for women without actually listening to women.

We’re all trying our best to be good people in the world and this shit is complicated.But there are a few things you might want to know. I wrote this for you.

1. It’s Not Women’s Responsibility to Educate You

Teach yourself about sexism and misogyny and about how to recreate our culture to eliminate them.

Some of us embrace this role and others of us don’t, but none of us want to do this all the time.

What does emotional labor look like? Listening to others talk about their problems, processing issues and providing advice, caring for others’ feelings, offering space and time, and sometimes, physical affection in the form of hugs and handholding.

Because women have been socially conditioned to see this labor as part of our role as women and because people of all genders have been conditioned to see women as caretakers, you might not realize when you’re asking women to do this.

Check in with the women in your life before you ask them to provide emotional support.

Make sure they have the time, energy, and resources to offer it. Make sure you have their permission. Notice the amount of space you take up in a conversation.

Does this sound exhausting? It is.

And this is the work women do all the time. We do this work on top of the work of moving through the world while women, which I assure you is time-consuming, laborious, hard, and often demoralizing.

Lastly, don’t engage women you don’t know or barely know in intense emotional revelations. I don’t need to know from the man in line at the grocery store about his recent traumas.

I don’t need to deal with the cantankerous discharge of a stranger’s horrible day. You are taking an emotional dump all over us. Take care of your own emotional needs.

4. Do Your Homework and Seek Out Women’s Perspectives

Read articles and books that have nothing to do with feminism, but that are written by women.

Look at your bookshelf. Is it full of mostly male authors? Think of why that might be. Then, commit to exclusively reading work by women – from all different countries, with different backgrounds and identities – for a week, a month, a year, or more.

Ask the women in your life for recommendations of books that changed their lives, books where they felt deeply heard or seen. Read those books.

Are all your female characters one-dimensional? Are they always to blame for the woes of your male protagonist?

How many women are you interviewing for your documentary? Did you integrate a mix of voices in terms of race, ethnicity, nationality, class, ability, size and shape, orientation, placement along the gender spectrum?

What are your songs about, and what worldview do they reflect?

Is the art you make reinforcing problematic cultural narratives?

7. Find Other Men Doing This Work

Learn from them, share resources.

And then – and this is really important – have conversations with your male friends, colleagues, and neighbors about sexism and misogyny.

Instigate the difficult conversations.

Ask hard questions of yourselves and one another. You have likely lived most of your life without having to think about these things.

Women haven’t had this luxury.

Be uncomfortable. But also, find support in doing this work.

8. Respect Women’s Boundaries

No means no, period.

You have no right to a woman’s body, time, energy, attention, respect, and so on. Relatedly, if a woman gives clear signals, verbally or otherwise, that she does not want you to interact with her, leave her alone.

9. Don’t Police Women’s Bodies or Voices

Women are autonomous beings, and contrary to cultural messages that say otherwise, we don’t exist for the pleasure of others.

What we wear, where we walk, what we do or don’t do with our bodies is no one’s concern but our own.

Similarly, women are allowed to have our own perspectives – and to articulate them in the ways we choose – and just because a woman disagrees with you doesn’t mean that she doesn’t understand the complexities of the situation and needs an explanation.

10. Doing This Work Doesn’t Make You a Hero

But you don’t deserve accolades or applause, just like a father doesn’t deserve these for changing his child’s diaper.

11. Realize That Doing This Work Isn’t a One-Shot Deal

If you want to be an ally, it means you commit to a lifetime of continuing education.

It means you look hard at your own shit.

It means you look for ways to support the women in your life. It means you determine ways to work on a community and systemic level. You’ll be uncomfortable a lot of the time. You’ll likely get defensive.